UN’s Michelle Bachelet arrives in China to assess situation in Xinjiang amid US doubts

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The US is sceptical of UN human rights chief Michelle Bachelet traveling to China at Beijing’s invitation, and is raising doubts about Chinese officials giving her “necessary access” to assess the situation.

The UN Human Rights Commissioner, Michelle Bachelet started her six-day visit to China on Monday, the first such visit in 17 years.

Bachelet “has arrived and is in meetings,” her spokesperson told a news agency.

The human rights chief will be meeting a number of senior officials at a national and local level and is also visiting cities of Urumqi and Kashgar in Xinjiang, the Chinese province where Western officials claim Beijing is conducting a massive discrimination campaign against Muslim Uyghurs. 

Meetings with civil society organizations, academics and business representatives are also expected to take place.

An advance team has been in the country since April to make necessary preparations ahead of the trip.

The US has expressed concern over the amount of access Bachelet will have during the six day trip.

“We have no expectation that the PRC (People’s Republic of China) will grant the necessary access required to conduct a complete, unmanipulated assessment of the human rights environment in Xinjiang,” State Department spokesman Ned Price told reporters.

The US government says what the Chinese government is doing in Xinjiang amounts to a “genocide” and in December 2021 began instituting sanctions which barred imports from the Xinjiang region.

Right groups allege the Chinese government has arbitrarily detained around one million Uyghurs and individuals from other predominantly Muslim minority groups in “reeducation camps” in the northwestern region. Activists have alleged that individuals in the camps have been subjected to torture, sterilization, forced labor and indoctrination.

Beijing has strongly denied the allegations and says the facilities are vocational training centers aimed at eradicating terrorism.

Bachelet has also faced an increasing level of criticism over her visit to China and for failing to release a report on the situation commissioned more than three-and-a-half years ago. Human rights activists have been waiting for its publication for months, and called on her to release it without delay.

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